Re: Using Apple's standard emacs with X11?
Re: Using Apple's standard emacs with X11?
- Subject: Re: Using Apple's standard emacs with X11?
- From: Richard Johnson <email@hidden>
- Date: Thu, 16 Oct 2003 11:41:21 -0700
My point is that if you run Apple /usr/bin/emacs with "-help" you get:
Display options:
--background-color, -bg COLOR window background color
--border-color, -bd COLOR main border color
--border-width, -bw WIDTH width of main border
--cursor-color, -cr COLOR color of the Emacs cursor indicating
point
--display, -d DISPLAY use X server DISPLAY
--font, -fn FONT default font; must be fixed-widthp
--foreground-color, -fg COLOR window foreground color
--geometry, -g GEOMETRY window geometry
--iconic start Emacs in iconified state
--icon-type, -i use picture of gnu for Emacs icon
--internal-border, -ib WIDTH width between text and main border
--line-spacing, -lsp PIXELS additional space to put between lines
--mouse-color, -ms COLOR mouse cursor color in Emacs window
--name NAME title of main Emacs window
--reverse-video, -r, -rv switch foreground and background
--title, -T, -wn, TITLE title for Emacs windows
--vertical-scroll-bars, -vb enable vertical scroll bars
--xrm XRESOURCES set additional X resources
These are all X11 options. So, why does it mention (and take on the
command line) such options if it's not going to do anything with them?
Also, I was just trying to mention to Apple that if they would simply
include the X11 support into their version of emacs, then people
wouldn't have to take up more of their disk space installing yet
another version of the same program. Just a suggestion. Take it or
trash it.
/raj
On Thursday, October 16, 2003, at 12:45 AM, Massimo Marino wrote:
On Thursday, October 16, 2003, at 07:01 AM,
email@hidden wrote:
Message: 2
Date: Wed, 15 Oct 2003 10:56:46 +0200
Subject: Re: Using Apple's standard emacs with X11?
Cc: email@hidden, Richard Johnson <email@hidden>
To: Sven Nueesch <email@hidden>
From: Enrico Franconi <email@hidden>
The original X11 emacs runs in a terminal window only. I didn't find
anything to make it open an X window. I then switched to fink Emacs
which runs perfectly and I am using it everyday.
There is nothing wrong with the Apple emacs build:
Since the default installation of OS X is *without* X11 environment,
Apple provided emacs built with no X11 support. You get the same
result with *any* emacs if on the command line you issue: 'emacs -nw'.
The option -nw is hard-wired on OS X in that it cannot assume X11
environment is present. If you compile fink emacs with no x11 you get
the same result as with Apple provided one: only terminal run.
Massimo
o#?
Massimo Marino
NERSC Division - HPC Department
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
On leave at CERN, CH, EP Division, Atlas experiment
b: (+41) 22 767-1288 fax: (+41) 22 767-8350 b: 32-R-C24
b : email@hidden, email@hidden
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